Web/Tech

July 10, 2009

Aurora Opens Viewer Architecture

Came across this press release on LinkedIn about Aurora Interactive.  Aurora recently also announced they power the new PathXchange and provide a universal viewer for the site.

Aurora Interactive in line with its “Open Architecture” philosophy will supply developers with a SDK and free developer licences for its mScope universal medical image viewing platform.

"Aurora Interactive, the world leader in digital pathology communications, announced today that, in line with its “Open Architecture” philosophy, it will supply developers with a software development kit and free developer licences for its mScope universal medical image viewing platform.

Medicine is increasingly becoming a knowledge and information industry and it makes sense to draw on digital pathology in making this type of transition, to use information technology to improve health care. Aurora has achieved a worldwide leadership position by collaborating on a continuous basis with its healthcare customers and its highest priority is satisfied customers.

“It is a commitment to overall quality that extends to our customers, shareholders, partners, employees and, most importantly, to those patients who depend on us all” declared Mr. Pierre Le Fèvre, President and Chief Executive Officer of Aurora Interactive.

Mr. Le Fèvre further added: “We are committed to better patient outcomes and believe that digital pathology will greatly contribute to these. We want to encourage and facilitate the development of the analytical tools that will improve the diagnostic efficiency and efficacy of today’s pathologists”.

Aurora’s customers receive the kind of quality and service they expect from a leader. Aurora continues to evolve as the needs of its customers change and as new opportunities are created in the market."


 

June 10, 2009

Introducing PathXchange

Since first hearing and seeing this site in the BioImagene booth at USCAP have uploaded over 50 cases and the service provided for scanning and web hosting your cases has been top notch! 

Included in the cases I have had scanned to date is a soft tissue tumor study set with comments submitted on a few of the cases (I still need to respond to...) about the diagnosis, histogenesis or prognosis of the lesions. 

We also recently uploaded another set of 40 pancreas cases with 10 examples each of 3 different forms of pancreatitis and 10 cases of carcinoma for comparison.  One of the goals of this project is to include gastroenterologists to share in the discussion as well.  Another application I plan on using the site for is resident education as "unknown" cases.

Overall, a great service and site and another example of the Pathology 2.0 revolution - content by users, for users, sharing cases, knowledge, experience & collective experience.

To date, over 800 users have joined and 1200 cases have been uploaded to the site.  I encourage you to take a look for yourself.

Introducing PathXchange – bringing pathologists together online

PathXchange.org (Px) is professional networking portal for the global pathology community.  Think of it as YouTube and Facebook for pathology! Px brings the field of pathology into the digital age with Web 2.0 features:

·       Browse interesting cases from around the world

·       Create your own online case gallery

·       Share your cases and slides with colleagues

·       Search our expanding global knowledge base

·       Learn about the latest advances in the field

·       Ask experts for their opinion on your case

Creating and sharing a case in Px takes only a minute. In just a few clicks, you can upload case images that you captured using any device, in any format, whether they are area snapshots or whole slide images. If you have glass slides for your case – no problem! Just mail us your slides.  We will digitize and upload the images for you.

Join the fastest growing pathology community! Sign up now for a FREE membership:
www.PathXchange.org.

Sign up before June 11, 2009 for a chance to win an iPod Shuffle. Create and share a case before June 18, 2009 for a chance to win an iPod Touch.

About PathXchange.org
Px is not-for-profit and vendor neutral.  BioImagene Inc. is a proud Platinum Sponsor of the site.  If you have any questions or would like to learn more about Px, don’t hesitate to send us an email or call us at (408) 207.4272. You can also find more information about Px by visiting our site:
www.PathXchange.org

June 02, 2009

Olympus America Inc. Continues to Broaden its Virtual Microscopy Patent Portfolio

CENTER VALLEY, Pa., June 2, 2009 - Olympus America Inc. (“Olympus”) announced today that The United States Patent and Trademark Office has issued Patent No. 7,542,596, “Method & Apparatus for Internet, Intranet and Local Viewing of Virtual Microscope Slides.”  This patent further broadens the scope of the Olympus portfolio in the field of virtual microscopy. 
 
The patent claims methods for the transmission of virtual microscope image data and allows for the quick and efficient viewing of these large image files over the Internet or an intranet. The patent also relates to methods for multiple users to simultaneously view and discuss images over the Internet or an intranet.   
 
Olympus currently holds over 40 issued patents and published patent applications worldwide in the field of virtual microscopy. This patent portfolio broadly covers many of the fundamental aspects for the creation, storage, transmission, and remote viewing of virtual microscope slide images.  Olympus strives to continually research and develop new and innovative technologies to further advance this important and rapidly growing market. 


About Olympus Scientific Equipment Group
Olympus America Scientific Equipment Group provides innovative microscope imaging solutions for researchers, doctors, clinicians and educators. Olympus microscope systems offer unsurpassed optics, superior construction and system versatility to meet the ever-changing needs of microscopists, paving the way for future advances in life science.
About Olympus


Olympus is a precision technology leader, creating innovative opto-digital solutions in healthcare, life science and consumer electronics products. 

Olympus works collaboratively with its customers and its affiliates worldwide to leverage R&D investment in precision technology and manufacturing processes across diverse business lines. These include:

  • Gastrointestinal endoscopes, accessories, and minimally invasive surgical products;
  • Advanced clinical and research microscopes;
  • Lab automation systems, chemistry-immuno and blood bank analyzers and reagents;
  • Digital cameras and voice recorders.
Olympus serves healthcare and commercial laboratory markets with integrated product solutions and financial, educational and consulting services that help customers to efficiently, reliably and more easily achieve exceptional results. Olympus develops breakthrough technologies with revolutionary product design and functionality for the consumer and professional photography markets, and also is the leader in gastrointestinal endoscopy and clinical and educational microscopes. For more information, visit www.olympusamerica.com.

May 23, 2009

THE INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF PATHOLOGY (FRENCH DIVISION) WILL USE mScope

MONTREAL, May 6, 2009 – Aurora Interactive, the world leader in digital pathology communications, announced today that they have been selected by the French Division of the International Academy of Pathology (IAP) to supply their medical educational software platform, mScope for the continuing education of 1200 French Pathologists.

“We are happy to collaborate with Aurora’s team on this ambitious project and train our country’s pathologists with a leading-edge digital technology” declared Dr. André Balaton, President of the IAP (French Division). “This is a turning point in the way teaching is done by the IAP France which extends outside the country” he stated.. He added: “the software mScope is widely used in Austria, Canada, Holland, Spain, the Czech Republic and the United States for clinical and pedagogical ends”.

Mr. Pierre Le Fèvre, President and Chief Executive Officer of Aurora Interactive stated that: “This is the beginning of an exciting collaboration. Pathologists worldwide are looking for solutions to improve communication among them. They have turned to digital pathology as a way to confront these challenges and mScope is the solution.”

About Aurora Interactive Aurora Interactive’s mission is to facilitate and contribute to better patient outcomes. Its medical communications software enables physicians and members of the medical community to realize their full potential by eliminating the learning, diagnostic and collaborative restrictions imposed by time and space. The professionals at Aurora Interactive develop and commercialize mScope, a universal web viewer and its collaborative tools to view all medical images anytime, anywhere. mScope is aimed at serving the medical practice (doctors and health professionals) and ultimately the patients. Its digital pathology software has three applications, mScope Education, mScope Clinical, and mScope Universal Viewer. A fourth application is currently in the development phase.

Founded in 2002, Aurora Interactive, a privately-held company, has a list of clients that include universities and hospitals in the United States, Canada and across the European Union. Aurora Interactive allows HealthCare Authorities, Hospitals, Teaching Facilities, Veterinary, Pharma and Reference Laboratories throughout the world, access to state-of-the-art telemedicine in order to bring a simple reliable medical communication platform for images and content to physicians and other health care professionals.

For further information, please consult our web site at www.auroramsc.com or contact:

Jacques C. Gagnon
(514) 713-7303
jcgagnon@jcgcom.ca

May 19, 2009

Platform allows patients, physicians to share diagnostic laboratory test results online

Healthcare IT News (5/15, Hardy) reported that, "through a joint effort by Quest Diagnostics and Microsoft HealthVault, patients and physicians can now share diagnostic laboratory test results online." Physicians "who use Care360, a patient-centric portal from...Quest Diagnostics, can transfer test results in a HIPAA-compliant format to a protected account per patient request." Meanwhile, "patients will be able to use this account to view past and present diagnostic laboratory records from their physicians." According to David Cerino, general manager of consumer health, Microsoft Health Solutions Group, "Lab results are one piece of the puzzle necessary to give people a complete picture of their health, which we are now able to deliver securely through the connection between Quest Diagnostics and HealthVault."

May 07, 2009

Thoughts on HIMMS meeting

Attended the HIMMS meeting in Chicago a few weeks ago. Ole Eichorn over at The Daily Scan has a very nice report as well (with better pictures).  Enjoyed Ole's talk (one of the few related specifically to specialty of pathology).  Lot of interest among hospital IT folks about capacity, bandwidth, security, archiving image needs and compatibility between different systems as well as DICOM compliance for whole slide images in pathology.  From my perspective, they seem to understand this is technology they may need to support in their institutions and were asking very pertinent questions. 

No discusion about image resolution for clinical use, images being too large to manage or ability to serve images.  Discussion much more focused on understanding what needs to be done to support the technology.

Telemedicine was a large part of the program including the number and scale of exhibitor booths.

Can you imagine having mimes at the next USCAP meeting?

IMG00073-20090407-1202 

Harris Corporation had a booth and demonstrated their technology to move whole slide images and view them rapidly over satellite communication with BioImagene slides.  Very fast viewing of whole slide images without any tiling or pixelation with satellite communication from remote serve.

IMG00068-20090407-1109     

Apollo PACS (who have recently re-designed their website) exhibited at the meeting as well as dozens of other PACS companies.  I spoke with several and asked about what they were doing considering whole slide images in pathology.  Most had no idea what I was talking about, what a pathology slide was and what whole slide scanning or digital pathology involves.  Despite that they all said the same thing, "If it is DICOM, we can do it." 

All in all, the highlight of the meeting for me was hearing Dr. Jerry Linenger speak who gave one of the closing keynotes (Alan Greenspan gave the other).  Picked up one of Dr. Linenger's books since ("Off the Planet") and recommend if space travel interests you.


May 06, 2009

Animated flu virus

I do not know what to make of all the recent news and stories about the Swine/North American/Newly mutated flu virus and how virulent it actually is. 

Nonetheless, The 1x Objective has some nice videos and other links on the proposed pathogenesis for the mutated strain.

April 28, 2009

Web tracking of swine flu

Google maps, Twitter, RSS feeds, Web sites track spread of flu

April 27, 2009 | Bernie Monegain, Editor, Healthcare IT News

WASHINGTON – Technology of varying types is making it possible to track new cases of swine flu in close to real time.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization Web sites are posting up-to-the minute information about new cases and recommendations for the public and local and state officials on how to respond to the threat.

The CDC is tweeting updates at twitter.com/cdcemergency. The CDC and WHO are also providing data via an RSS feed, and the CDC is also offering podcasts.

In Mexico, reports indicate that more than 80 people may have died of the flu.

According to the most recent posting on the WHO's Web site Monday morning, the United States has reported 20 laboratory-confirmed human cases of swine influenza A/H1N1 (eight in New York, seven in California, two in Texas, two in Kansas and one in Ohio). All have had mild influenza-like illness, with only one requiring brief hospitalization. No deaths have been reported.

Google maps have pinpointed these cases as they are reported. Google announced last November it would employ its search engines to help the CDC track the flu.

Google queries, officials said, can be counted more quickly. They compared their aggregated queries against data provided by the CDC and found there is a close relationship between the frequency of the search queries and the number of people who are experiencing flu-like symptoms each week.
 
HealthMap aggregates news feeds from the WHO, Google News and elsewhere to map disease outbreaks around the world.  It also offers Twitter alerts on the latest swine flu news.

The CDC is working closely with officials in states where human cases of swine influenza A/H1N1 have been identified, as well as with health officials in Mexico, Canada and the WHO, according to a notice on the CDC Web site Monday. "This includes deploying staff domestically and internationally to provide guidance and technical support," the notice states. "CDC has activated its Emergency Operations Center to coordinate this investigation."

On Sunday, the Department of Health and Human Services declared a public health emergency in the United States. Officials called the measure "standard operating procedure that allowed them "to free up federal, state and local agencies and their resources for prevention and mitigation."

April 22, 2009

Pathology 2.0

This is an article I had an opportunity to write for ADVANCE for Administrators of the Laboratory in conjunction with a recent article entitled "Integrating Digital Pathology" in this month's issue.  My thanks to the publisher and Kelly Graham, assistant editor.

I will also present this topic at the upcoming CAP Futurescape meeting this June.

The term "Web 2.0" refers to a perceived second generation of Web development and design that aims to facilitate communication, secure information sharing, offer ability and collaboration on the Internet. Web 2.0 concepts have led to the development and evolution of Web-based communities, hosted services and applications, such as social-networking sites, video-sharing sites, wikis and blogs.  

The term was first used by Dale Dougherty and Craig Cline and became notable after the O'Reilly Media Web suggested a new version of the World Wide Web. It does not refer to an update to any technical specifications, but rather to changes in the way software developers and users utilize the Web.

According to time to Tim O'Reilly, "Web 2.0 is the business revolution in the computer industry caused by the move to the Internet as a platform, and in an attempt to understand the worlds for success on that new platform." Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the Web, has questioned whether one can use the term in any meaningful way, since many of the technological components of Web 2.0 have existed since the early days of the Web.

Regardless of whether you view Web 2.0 as new or simply a modification of existing Internet technologies, Web 2.0 technologies allow users to do more than just retrieve information. The Web 2.0 tool/technologies allow content by users for users that is interactive and dynamic rather than static information being retrieved without input.

Changing Nature of Pathology

Because of the image-intense nature of anatomic pathology and traditional educational and clinical business practices (i.e., atlases, case sharing and consultation among colleagues), there is opportunity for incredible synergy between anatomic pathology and Web 2.0 technology vis-à-vis, Pathology 2.0.

The user-participatory nature of Web 2.0 allows for openness, freedom and collective intelligence. This expanded user experience, dynamic content and harnessing of collective intelligence in a simple fashion provide for the easy exchanged, sharing and delivery of all sorts of information with comment and discussion. Several examples of this currently exist, from image sharing sites on Flickr to Aperio's Second Slide consultation (www.secondslide.com) hosting service to BioImagene's PathXchange (www.pathxchange.org). Other examples that facilitate pathology image sharing include Med Pix (rad.usuhs.mil/medpix/) and Medting (www.medting.com). Sites such as MyPACS.net (www.mypacs.net) also allow for the creation of pathology teaching files in ways to data share and collaborate.

New Wave

Other technologies such as social media sites (Facebook and Youtube) also allow users to post and share collective intelligence for research, educational and clinical practice. Again, the ability for content by users for users in a simple and accessible format allow glass slides (more accurately, images derived from glass slides) to be shared and viewed in a way that extends beyond institutional walls takes advantage of Web 2.0.

My Digital Pathology Blog at www.tissuepathology.com serves to educate pathologists and the pathology community on the deliverables of digital pathology, current news and events and applications in education, research and clinical practice. This is a form of "academic blogging" that may be timely or relevant to interested audience participants. It also allows for collaboration between industry and practitioners to expand the community, enhance the discussion, promote the technology and offer opinion from my perspective while also allowing others to comment, criticize and share in an open and dynamic dialog. Blogging allows users to share content and ideas, gives others a sense of your own work and interests and in my case, as an academic pathologist, allows a platform for non-peer reviewed writing that is original and unedited content (for better or worse). This extends into other networking opportunities.

Certainly these are disruptive technologies that some may not be comfortable with or feel have a place in medicine or pathology. There is a level of transparency to which we all must grow accustomed that extends far beyond our own microscope and slide storage rooms. The real value is in the collective intelligence that can now be harnessed.

Web 2.0 is about the next generation of applications on the Internet, featuring user-generated content, collaboration and community and offers technology to expand our horizons and to showcase our specialty of anatomic pathology like never before.

April 13, 2009

Physicians have access to new obstetrics iPhone app

Very interesting and practical application --

An obstetrics application for use on the iPhone has been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration,  says the company that created it.

San Antonio, Texas-based AirStrip Technologies, which bills itself as a pioneer in mobile medical software applications, announced that it has received FDA clearance to release the AirStrip OB application for use on the iPhone. The application is now available for download to qualified physicians at Apple's App Store.

AirStrip OB allows obstetricians to use their iPhones to remotely access virtual real-time and historical waveform data for both the mother and baby, including heart tracings and contraction patterns, as well as nursing notes and exam status. The data is sent directly from hospitals' labor and delivery units and can be accessed on the iPhone anytime and anywhere the doctor gets a cell-phone connection.Airstrip-iphone

"We believe that AirStrip OB for the iPhone is truly a milestone for mobile healthcare technology," said Cameron Powell, MD, president and CMO of AirStrip Technologies. "By using the iPhone's groundbreaking technology, AirStrip OB sets the bar for a higher standard of care, and utilizes the iPhone's full potential in a healthcare setting."

Noting that labor and delivery is one of the riskiest and most litigious environments in healthcare, and that communication errors lead to a measurable majority of actionable bad outcomes, Powell added that AirStrip OB aims to mitigate that risk by closing the communication gap among caregivers.

Already available on PDAs and Smartphones and in use by a growing number of obstetricians nationwide on Windows Mobile devices, the AirStrip OB/iPhone application provides doctors with multi-touch capabilities to quickly scroll and zoom through critical data, AirStrip executives said.

They say the application is highly intuitive and maximizes real estate on the iPhone's touchscreen, providing rapid visualization of more medical data per screen compared with any other mobile device or Smartphone available today. It delivers vital information about a number of patients across multiple hospitals.

"The demands of a physician's day necessitate their periodic absence from labor and delivery and other acute care environments," Powell said. "As a result, doctors need easy-to-use, standards-based, intuitive mobile applications that can be quickly downloaded with the necessary security and configuration files in place, and with hospital perinatal systems up and running live."

The hospital purchases the AirStrip system, which works in tandem with the hospital's existing patient monitoring system, and doctors can then install the AirStrip OB application on their iPhone.

http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/physicians-have-access-new-obstetrics-iphone-app

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